Pindar, Pythian 1.85

 

“Envy is stronger than pity”

κρέσσον γὰρ οἰκτιρμοῦ φθόνος

 

 

Pindar reflects on human nature. But he might not be lamenting. As Hesiod says, the ‘good’ type of strife makes a man envy his neighbor’s goods–and work harder as a consequence (Works and Days, 21-26):

 

εἰς ἕτερον γάρ τίς τε ἴδεν ἔργοιο χατίζων

πλούσιον, ὃς σπεύδει μὲν ἀρόμεναι ἠδὲ φυτεύειν

οἶκόν τ’ εὖ θέσθαι· ζηλοῖ δέ τε γείτονα γείτων

εἰς ἄφενος σπεύδοντ’· ἀγαθὴ δ’ ῎Ερις ἥδε βροτοῖσιν.

καὶ κεραμεὺς κεραμεῖ κοτέει καὶ τέκτονι τέκτων,

καὶ πτωχὸς πτωχῷ φθονέει καὶ ἀοιδὸς ἀοιδῷ. 

Martial, Epigrams 5.81

“You will always be poor, Aemilianus, if you are poor;
nowadays wealth comes to no one but the rich”.

semper pauper eris, si pauper es, Aemiliane;
dantur opes nullis nunc nisi divitibus.

Marcus Valerius Martialis

Euenus (Simplicius on Aristotle’s Physics 4.221a31)

 

“Time is the wisest and most unteachable thing.”

 

σοφώτατόν τοι κἀμαθέστατον χρόνος

 

(Yes, we left the assertive τοι out of the translation.)

Simplicius, not so simple.

 

Euenus?

Herodotus, 1 4.8-11

 

“The Persians say that they disregarded the women who were kidnapped from Asia but that the Greeks raised a mighty army for the sake of a Spartan woman”

Σφέας μὲν δὴ τοὺς ἐκ τῆς ᾿Ασίης λέγουσι Πέρσαι ἁρπαζομένων

τῶν γυναικῶν λόγον οὐδένα ποιήσασθαι, ῞Ελληνας δὲ Λακε-

δαιμονίης εἵνεκεν γυναικὸς στόλον μέγαν συναγεῖραι …

 

Herodotus, the historian’s enemy and friend.

 

Gorgias, Defense of Helen 1

 

“Kosmos is: a city well-peopled, a body’s beauty, a soul’s wisdom, virtue for a deed and the truth of a word.”

(1) Κόσμος πόλει μὲν εὐανδρία, σώματι δὲ κάλλος, ψυχῆι δὲ

σοφία, πράγματι δὲ ἀρετή, λόγωι δὲ ἀλήθεια·

 

“Kosmos is: a city well-peopled, a body’s beauty, a soul’s wisdom, virtue for a deed and the truth of a word.”

 

Yes, defense of that Helen.

 

Gorgias of Leontini, gorgeous with words.

 

(He shows up in Plato’s dialogue named for him: The full text)

Horace, Epistles 1.1.41-42

“Virtue’s first rule is to avoid vice, and wisdom’s is to not be stupid”.

Theognis, 1219-1220

 

 

“It is difficult for an enemy to deceive

But it is easy for a friend to fool a friend.”

 

 

᾿Εχθρὸν μὲν χαλεπὸν καὶ δυσμενεῖ ἐξαπατῆσαι,

Κύρνε· φίλον δὲ φίλωι ῥάιδιον ἐξαπατᾶν.

 

Fool me once?

Theognis of Megara, a man with words for all occasions.

Horace, Satires 1.2.24

“In trying to avoid one sort of fault, fools rush in the opposite”.

dum vitant stulti vitia, in contraria currunt.

Quintus Horatius Flaccus

Pindar, Nemean 4.6

 

 

“The rumor of deeds lives longer than deeds themselves”

 

ῥῆμα δ’ ἐργμάτων χρονιώτερον βιοτεύει

 

How can we keep talking about sports without quoting some Pindar?

Homer, Odyssey 8.147-8

“For as long as he lives, a man has no greater glory

than that which he makes with his own hands and feet”

οὐ μὲν γὰρ μεῖζον κλέος ἀνέρος, ὄφρα κεν ᾖσιν,

ἢ ὅ τι ποσσίν τε ῥέξῃ καὶ χερσὶν ἑῇσιν.

Or so a Prince Dandy says to the long-suffering war veteran Odysseus

(Does this prompt the type of strife Horace talks about?)